GOOD NEWS Brothers and sisters! The chink in charge of selling Bill Clinton's White house to Red China has been nabbed after a 17 year gookhunt. Finally we have an opportunity to see the Clinton clan locked up in the penitentiary! With Christ's help (and a little waterboarding), this slant should provide all the evidence we need! GLORY!!
Brothers and sisters, this is big. All of the demoncrat thugs are dirty! Our Godly president GWB has an excellent chance of single-handedly destroying the demoncrats forever, just as Ronald Reagan destroyed communism! Shout Glory!!
Fugitive Fundraiser Norman Hsu Caught
FBI Agents Arrest Hsu For Unlawful Flight
GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. --Yung Yuen “Norman” Hsu, a well known fundraiser for the Democratic party, was wanted on federal charges of unlawful flight to avoid prosecution.
Hsu was arrested around 7:00 p.m. at St. Mary's Hospital after the FBI found him. Hsu had apparently become sick while riding on an Amtrak train and was rushed to the hospital after it stopped in Grand Junction.
Hsu was listed in fair condition, hospital vice president Dan Prinster said. He declined to provide details of Hsu's ailment, other than to say that Hsu "was delirious (when he arrived) and had identification."
Meanwhile, Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell became the latest of many Democratic politicians to return or donate to charity Hsu's election contributions.
Rendell had said last week he planned to keep nearly $40,000 of Hsu's money even though he was wanted for failing to appear for sentencing after pleading no contest to a felony charge of bilking investors out of $1 million.
"Though Norman is my friend, and remains so, his failure to appear casts a new light on his assertions regarding the original case," Rendell said in a statement before Hsu's arrest Thursday. "As a result, I will follow other elected officials and donate the money he contributed to me to charity."
New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton has said she plans to give to charity the $23,000 in donations she received from Hsu for her presidential and senatorial campaigns and to her political action committee, HillPac.
The growing flap over Hsu's contributions prompted Democratic presidential candidate Chris Dodd to release a statement Thursday vowing "to refuse to accept or possess campaign contributions raised, solicited, or delivered by fugitives from justice."
He pleaded no contest in 1991 to a felony count of grand theft and was facing up to three years in prison, but he skipped town before his 1992 sentencing date. Investigators believed he'd fled to Hong Kong.
Years later, he resurfaced as a top fundraiser, donating $260,000 to Democratic Party groups and federal candidates since 2004, according to Federal Election Commission records.
Though a top fundraiser for Clinton, he also donated to presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama's Senate campaign in 2004 and to Obama's political action committee.
Other Democrats who divested their campaigns of Hsu's money include California Democratic Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, as well as Al Franken, a Senate candidate in Minnesota, Reps. Michael Honda and Doris Matsui of California and Rep. Joe Sestak of Pennsylvania.
FBI Agents Arrest Hsu For Unlawful Flight
GRAND JUNCTION, Colo. --Yung Yuen “Norman” Hsu, a well known fundraiser for the Democratic party, was wanted on federal charges of unlawful flight to avoid prosecution.
Hsu was arrested around 7:00 p.m. at St. Mary's Hospital after the FBI found him. Hsu had apparently become sick while riding on an Amtrak train and was rushed to the hospital after it stopped in Grand Junction.
Hsu was listed in fair condition, hospital vice president Dan Prinster said. He declined to provide details of Hsu's ailment, other than to say that Hsu "was delirious (when he arrived) and had identification."
Meanwhile, Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell became the latest of many Democratic politicians to return or donate to charity Hsu's election contributions.
Rendell had said last week he planned to keep nearly $40,000 of Hsu's money even though he was wanted for failing to appear for sentencing after pleading no contest to a felony charge of bilking investors out of $1 million.
"Though Norman is my friend, and remains so, his failure to appear casts a new light on his assertions regarding the original case," Rendell said in a statement before Hsu's arrest Thursday. "As a result, I will follow other elected officials and donate the money he contributed to me to charity."
New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton has said she plans to give to charity the $23,000 in donations she received from Hsu for her presidential and senatorial campaigns and to her political action committee, HillPac.
The growing flap over Hsu's contributions prompted Democratic presidential candidate Chris Dodd to release a statement Thursday vowing "to refuse to accept or possess campaign contributions raised, solicited, or delivered by fugitives from justice."
He pleaded no contest in 1991 to a felony count of grand theft and was facing up to three years in prison, but he skipped town before his 1992 sentencing date. Investigators believed he'd fled to Hong Kong.
Years later, he resurfaced as a top fundraiser, donating $260,000 to Democratic Party groups and federal candidates since 2004, according to Federal Election Commission records.
Though a top fundraiser for Clinton, he also donated to presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama's Senate campaign in 2004 and to Obama's political action committee.
Other Democrats who divested their campaigns of Hsu's money include California Democratic Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom and Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, as well as Al Franken, a Senate candidate in Minnesota, Reps. Michael Honda and Doris Matsui of California and Rep. Joe Sestak of Pennsylvania.
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